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Updated: May 17, 2025 07:31
Nestle India's outgoing Chairman and Managing Director, Suresh Narayanan, has made a clarion call to corporate India to take seriously the dearth of true value-based leadership as a matter of urgency. Addressing the second edition of the HR and L&D Conclave, Narayanan reiterated that today's corporate world is grappling with a lack of leaders who give greater importance to ethics, empathy, and organizational health than to personal success and money measures.
Narayanan cautioned that workplaces are becoming more corrosive where people assign success to themselves alone, while ignoring the role of collective well-being. He supported the leadership model which involves connecting with employees empathetically and fostering trust and support, particularly at times of adversity.
Key Highlights:
Narayanan emphasized that effective leaders need to put the well-being of the whole organization and its employees ahead of their career aspirations.
He urged the creation of competent and ethical leaders, contending that leadership cannot be gauged solely by financial results.
Investors should not just focus on conventional measurements such as earnings per share and return on capital, he said, but also value-based leadership that is sustainable and resultant on determining an organization's true value.
Narayanan stated three fundamental leadership qualities: the capacity to steer in any situation, existence on the values and purpose of oneself and the company, and the ability to use the power of people effectively.
Citing his own experience leading Nestle India out of the 2015 Maggi disaster, Narayanan emphasized the value of humility and cooperation over attempting to be a "superman" figure. He attributed the company's turnaround to staying close to stakeholders and focusing on collective action.
He underlined that organizational failure is more often the result of weak leadership, listing self-absorption, hubris, and governance problems as typical pitfalls.
Narayanan concluded by calling on corporate India to raise a new generation of leaders capable of managing crises with integrity, compassion, and an abiding commitment to organizational culture.
Narayanan's words are a useful reminder that the principles of leadership-trust, selflessness, and putting culture first-don't change despite changing business conditions. He exhorted companies to make a conscious effort to develop these traits in order to succeed in the long run and remain resilient.
Sources:
Rediff Money, Goodreturns, Economic Times, The Week